THE DAILY NEWSLETTER - THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 2022

Media Winners & Losers

MEDIA WINNER:
Dafna Linzer

Politico had a big get this week, announcing that Dafna Linzer will be taking over the role of executive editor. The veteran will be working with editor-in-chief Matt Kaminski out of Washington, D.C. starting on April 25.

The star journalist was most recently the managing editor for politics for MSNBC and NBC News, as well as the managing editor for NBC's digital news.

Kaminski sent a staff memo with the news on Wednesday:

"Over the past months, we’ve talked to many of you about the publication’s current and future ambitions. Drawing on those conversations, we’ve looked broadly for people who will help us achieve them. Dafna’s appointment is one of the critical steps we are taking this spring to position POLITICO for a great new era.

"Following a national search, Dafna emerged as an ideal candidate to join the editorial leadership team in this essential role. Dafna’s mandate is to ensure that our journalism is best in class and ambitious, and that we have the talent here to deliver on that promise to our readers."

Politico lauded Linzer's extensive and widely varied experience in the industry.

"Dafna brings an unusually broad range of experience and record of achievement to POLITICO. She has worked in print, digital and television. She knows the political and Washington story as well as anyone, but has also excelled as a foreign correspondent and investigative reporter."

"She’s succeeded at every professional stop," said Kaminski, detailing her credentials which include the Associated Press, Pro Publica, and as "a must-read as a national security correspondent at the Washington Post."

In a tweet, Linzer adds she is "Honored to join this stellar news organization at a time when POLITICO is expanding in scope and ambition."

MEDIA LOSER:
Steve Schmidt

Ex-Republican strategist Steve Schmidt, formerly of the Lincoln Project, tried and failed to dunk on New York Times reporter Maggie Haberman on Twitter Wednesday night. He shared private messages showing he messaged her eight times after she made it clear she did not wish to talk.

Dean Baquet, the executive editor of the New York Times, told Mediaite, “This is harassment and it is unacceptable.”

Schmidt shared four pages of emails on Twitter he had with Haberman, whose former beat was Donald Trump.

It isn’t clear what triggered Schmidt. He stated in a thread he was out to expose the “rot” of access journalism. His complaints focused on whether he knew Lincoln Project co-founder John Weaver sending unwanted messages to 21 young men before he stepped down. The gist of his private exchanges with Haberman, though, centered on long-dead Times reporter Walter Duranty for some reason.

Schmidt tweeted about a nearly century-old story about Duranty and Hitler, tagging Haberman in it without explanation.

According to private messages he shared Wednesday, Schmidt sent Haberman an unsolicited screenshot of the tweet.

What followed was an exchange of precisely 26 messages wherein Schmidt berated Haberman and droned on about subjects such as Rick Wilson, Duranty, Trump, and The Lincoln Project.

There was no part of the uncomfortable thread or wild screenshots he shared in which it looked like Schmidt came out ahead. Unhinged would be a closer description.

Schmidt believed he was dunking on Haberman, but the thread accomplished little other than to further a notion that Lincoln Project co-founders are incapable of staying out of other people’s inboxes.

The A-Block

Waning Influence

Donald Trump Jr. is following in his father’s footsteps by announcing he will launch an online platform to compete with one that’s been mean to people named Trump.

According to a report by Axios, Trump Jr. is working with some of former President Donald Trump’s former staffers on “MxM News,” a news aggregation app “that they hope will compete with the likes of Apple News and Google News” and “to fill a void left by the Drudge Report’s waning influence.”

Trump alumni involved in MxM News include former Trump spokesperson Taylor Budowich, who joined the app as a co-founder with Trump Jr., and Cliff Sims, a former White House aide and deputy director of national intelligence. Sims is the CEO of Telegraph Creative, which is an equity partner in MxM News and was responsible for designing the mobile app.

Specifically regarding the Drudge Report, the site has drawn the ire of Trump the Elder for a number of less-than-flattering headlines and stories it has featured regarding the former president. But while the site, as Axios noted, has fallen from their peak traffic over recent years, MxM News actually being able to be competitive is an uphill battle, as Drudge still both draws and drives a significant amount of traffic.

MxM News faces some other pretty significant challenges, too.


🇺🇦 FOR LATEST UKRAINE COVERAGE CLICK HERE


In Other News...

Durbin Applauds ‘Majority’ of Republicans for Handling Themselves ‘Professionally’ During Jackson Hearings

Tucker Carlson Tweet on Babylon Bee Suspension Over Rachel Levine Tweet Now Also Removed by Twitter

Dershowitz Rips Newsmax Guest Who Called Judge Jackson ‘This Chick’ Moments Before on Same Show

COLBY HALL: Sasse Calls Out ‘Jackassery’ of Senators Trying for Viral Videos — While Sitting Next to Ted Cruz

Must See Clip

‘I’ll Beat Your A**!’

The coach of the Miami Heat and another player got into a heated confrontation with the team’s star in what was a wild scene Wednesday night.

The chaotic confrontation took place during the third quarter of the team’s 118-104 loss to the Golden State Warriors — a Warriors squad which was without most of its top players including Stephen CurryAndre IguodalaDraymond Green and Klay Thompson. Videos show star forward Jimmy Butler trading verbal barbs with Udonis Haslem in a huddle during a timeout. Butler eventually got up from the bench, but Haslem got in his face. And both he and Haslem had to be separated

Then things really escalated.

Links We Like

A Dead-Name Passport and 16,500 Followers: How Zi Faámelu Escaped Ukraine
- Anna Conkling, Rolling Stone
When ‘Rigorous’ Courses Aren’t
- Frederick M. Hess, The Dispatch
The Inescapable Exhaustion of Being the “First” Black Woman
- A’shanti Gholar, Cosmopolitan
Ketanji Brown Jackson is Walking A Tightrope on Questions About Critical Race Theory
- Ivy Harris, NBC Think
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